Indianapolis Times, Volume 38, Number 274, Indianapolis, Marion County, 21 February 1927 — Page 7

LOVE IS LIKE A HONEYSUCKLE VINE IN THE GARDEN

jjou May Bruise it, Freeze It, Raze It, but It Will Spring Up Again Fresh, Tender anand True Dies, Says Martha Lee. By Martha Lee •Not all tile winds of heaven, can fan into flame the burnt ©m ashes of a dead love,” so say the cynics.

That, would seem to answer with flnalty, the age-old and frequently asked question, “Can a dead love be revived?” Maybe not. Love Joesn’t need to be revived, for— Love —real love, never dies. Komance may falter, mere passion may cool, circumstances may put time and distance and broken hopes between', but there, in the ground of human hearts, whereever real love has once blossomed, the dormant roots still lie. It’s like the honeysuckle vine in the garden. You may bruise it, strangle it, freeze it, lop it off and raze it down to earth —but you cannot uproot it and with even a little encouragement, it will spring up again, fresh and tender and true. Loves Him Though Parted Dear Martha Lee: I know you have helped others and if you could give me -onie light 7 would be grateful. I just don't see how to do, but I know there must be some way to make things right if T am patient. Two years ago I was parted from my husband. We had been married seven years. A short while before we parted, he became infatuated with a woman, w|o moved into our town and started a beamy -hop. I found it out and was so angry i didn't listen to anything or anyone. I I had sufficient grounds and got a divorer. afterwards I found out. he never saw the ■nnan again and he has to!d many others, ne has always loved me. However, he is bitterly angry and will not forgive me for turning so hard against him. Miss Lee, although some folks discourage me. I believe he truly does love me as I love him. Do you think real love ever dies and do you think l may get him back? He does not go with other women. A SORROWFUL WZFE',. Your husband’s later actions would indicate that he really cared for you. Y r ou made the mistake frequently made by persons bitterly angry—you acted hastily. Possibly his relations with the woman you were jealous of, were never what your imagination pictured. Anyway, I think the chances are quite good for a reconciliation between you, and as you love him dearly, don’t lose hope.

Wants Her Ideal Dear Miss Lee: I need you. 1 am 10 years old., considered good-looking. Have a responsible position and am associated with many prominent business, men all of wham ere nui'h o'der than mv-c’f. there-

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fore I cannot tolerate the silly line that the average fellow of today thinks is clever. 1 want to fall in love with someone who will be a real pal. My idea of an ideal fellow is Dr. Don Stihwatcr the outstanding character in “Sonia " Are there any men like that here'who are not married? 1 want someone who i- reserved, educated, ambitious and is really doing something worth while for his fellowmen. 1 am afraid that I will never meet anyone that J can truly love. Please toll me, do you think mine is a hopeless case? F. H. Well, it is indeed a large order that you have given to life, iny dear, but I wouldn't say your desire is an absolute hopeless one. Such men as you describe exist, and if they are few and far between, that doesn’t mean you may not meet them. It's good to have an ideal—to hope, reach and strive for it. “Hitching your wagon to a star,” ennobles and develops one. Use a little modern psychology on this and don’t admit, even to yourself that your quest is “hopeless.” Indeed, declare otherwise. It’s likely to help. Would She Be Happy? Dear Martha Lee: Please advise me. 1 have been married eighteen years. My husband has a different disposition from me. 1 want a real companion. Five years ago. I met a man who has been everything to me—only one thing bothers. He drank hard for Iwelve years until three months ago. He savs lie will not drink again. He wants me to get a divorce and marry him. What shall I do? Would I be happy? Do you think he would drink again? MRS. L. B. Yes, I think he will. Asa husband he would probably have the added unpleasantness of reminding you of your long infidelity to your present husband. By the way, what does the latter gentleman think or advise on the subject? about time you were giving him at least a hint of the situation. If lie’s been supporting you all this time, you owe him consideration at least. “Renee” is 16 years old, is considered good looking, and is a student at a business college. She feels much hurt because her parents object to her going with boys arid because they intimate that doing so, she avill get in trouble. You know, Renee, they are thinking only of your good and as you want to get the best out of your school work, better let the boys alone for a couple of years yet.

MENUS ' For the FAMILY

BY SISTER MARX'

BREAKFAST—AppIes, cereal, thin cream, ham omelet, crisp graham toast, orange marmalade, milk, coffee. LUNCHEON —Corn souffle, tomato jelly salad, nut bread ar.d butter sandwiches, prune pudding, milk, tea. DINNER—Pot roast of beef, brown gravy, mashed potatoes, buttered parsnips, horseradish and apple salad, graham rolls, cherry pudding, milk, coffee. The marmalade is suggested in the breakfast nrinu to furnish the needed touch of piquancy. If you make your own marmalade it can be as bitter or as mild as you prefer it. Keep in mind that carrots scraped and put through bhe food chopper and simmered in just enough water to prevent burning make a satisfactory “stretcher” as well as a neutralizing agent for the oranges. Com Souffle. Two cups canned corn, 3 eggs, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoqjjs sugar, (g teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 cups milk. Chop corn. Mix and sift sugar, flour, salt and pepper and stir into corn. Beat yolks of eggs until thick and lemon colored. Add to corn mixture. Rinse out bowl in which eggs were beaten with milk and add with softened butter to first mixture. Mix thoroughly and fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff and dr y. Turn into a well-buttered baking dish and bake twenty-five minutes in a moderate oven. Serve at once from baking dish. (Copyright, 1527, NEA Service, Inc.)

// 7 **"<*& 3g|||y^ ,

Pains That Never Came Here’s glorious news for long-suf-fering womankind; To every woman who periodically lias suffered pain. Menstruation need no longer be painful. And it is Science that is speaking! Specialists have developed* a tiny tablet called midol. It’s a simple thing, utterly harmless to a girl of fourteen, but it bti. ,s relief In five to seven minutes. And is effective twelve hous or longer! . Midol Is NOT a narcotic. It has no effect whatever on heart or nervous system. It acts directly on those organs affected by menstruation. They function normally, as they should, but the pain is banished. Complete relief —yes, perfect comfort —follows midol. Your druggist has midol for 40 cents, in a slim aluminum box to tuck in your purse. Takes Pain Off the Calendar

y. W. C. A. Notes EDUCATIONAL DEPARTMENT The first lecture in the Interior Decorating course offered by Mrs. M. C. Nelson, will be given Tuesday at 2. Mrs. Leo K. Fesler is offering a Saturday morning class in Self Expression fdr teachers. Mrs. W. B. Parker will open a Millinery Class, Wednesday from 2:00 to 4:00. An evening class will also meet Wednesdays. The evening Sewing Class has changed its meeting time from Tuesday to Wednesday at 7. Alteration Service is offered frpm 5:30 to 7:00. Student Council recently elected: President, Margaret Bennett; secretary, Mrs. Aulta White; treasurer, Bernice White. The meetings of the grade school reserves and the names of their advisors follow: Monday at 3 p. m., school 14, Margaret Toys; school 15, Olga Bonks; school 16, Ruby Wolf; Southport grade school, Marie Roberts. Tuesday: school 25, Fay Smith; Thursday, school 11, Dale Waterbury; school 31, Minnie Hadde; school 33, Mrs. W .P. Morton; school 18, Kathrine Tacoma; school 39, Thelma Tacoma; school 29, Mary Hastings; school 36, Kathryn Herrod, school' 60, Adrienne Schmedel; school 70, Arma Pursell; school 78, Mrs, A. Ward. Friday: School 45, Fay Smith and Elizabeth Johnson; school 13, Clara Wible. HEALTH DEPARTMENT The new council of the health education department will meet in the gym office Wednesday at 6. Members are Pearl Leonard, Erma Ditzenburger, Statia Nicholas, Mira White, Isabelle Small, Betty Wertz, and Josepnine Harblson. BUSINESS GIRLS Tuesday evening Business Girls will meet for dinner at 6:15. The Ama Theta Club will give a paatriotie program. INDUSTRIAL NEWS Boy Scouts will entertain the Industrial Department Wednesday evening with a patriotic program. Miss Opal Boston, the new president, will preside. Following dinner Miss Violet Van Note will have charge of reefeation and roler skating. Charter members of the Woolworth Club will initiate new members Wednesday evening after the dinner program. At the Interracial Committee meeting Friday at 6:15, States will be discussed. Miss Lillian Burkhart will be in charge. The New Old Council of the Industrial Department will have a week-end party and conference at the Central Building on next Saturday and Sunday. The committee in charge is: Eleanor Hardy, Dorothy Bennett and Beulah Tanner. Program committee, Evelyn Van Hook, Mildred Burgess and Jennie Jenkins. Miss Opal Boston will preside. Miss Violet Van Note will have charge of recreation. Miss Elizabeth McKenzie, executive secretary of the South Side branch, made “An Old Fashioned Girl” her theme for the program period of the weekly staff meeting Wednesday. SOUTH SIDE “Y” The following officers have recently been elected by the South Side committee of management: Magdalene Eberhart, chairman; Mrs. Fred Naegle, vice-chairman; Mrs. Hugh Copsey, recording secretary. The new committee chairmen are: Mrs. Lawrence Rudbeck, membership; Mrs. Geo. Gutzwiiler, finances; Mrs. H. S. Beckman, houses; Mr3. I. L. Frye, industrial; Mrs. Harold Hinkle, girl reserve; Mrs. Walter Schmelfeldt, hospitality; Mrs. Richard Miller, food service. The Allegra Business Girls Club has issued invitations to a Bunco party for young men and young women Tuesday night at 8. Proceeds will go to the Summer conference fund. Wednesday evening at 6 South Side Girls’ Industrial will meet for club suppei-. At 7 they will go to Central “Y” for a skating party. The Parent-Teacher Association of school 18 will have a Bunco party at the South Side “Y” Friday from 2 to 5. Mi's. Fi’ed Naegel will entertain the A Point Club at a 1 o'clock luncheon Wednesday. Miss Magdelene Eberhardt’s Sunday school class from the Second Reformed Church will meet at South Side “Y” Wednesday evening. TWO LEAVENERS Some cooks use a spoonful of baking powder to the spoonful of soda in sour milk biscuits or griddle cakes, to avoid the yelloW color and strong flavor that sometimes results from soda used alone. TIGHT BOXES Tea, coffee and spice will lose their flavor unless kept in tightly closed receptacles. OPEN DOOR CAREFULLY When a cake is baking, always open the oven door gently, to prevent it from falling.

FLAPPER FANNY SAYS: f fill • IMS 01927 BY NEA SERVICE, INC. WCtt. U. 8. RAT. OTT-

A flapper’s diary is just a scrap book. t

THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES

Boots and Her Buddies

■'Y'r V I! . ( 'BTE.A

Saint and tar Sinner

Wealthy RALPH CLUNX. 8. was murdered lust before he was to bare married frivolous CHERRY LANE. 18 Immediately Cherry disappears leaving a note for her sister FAtTH saving she could not so on with the wedding. Cherry s elopement with CHRIS WLLE.Y becomes known. Cherry bae been ensaged several times Once she tried to run away with ALBERT ETTELSON a married traveling salesman, and was rescued by her sister and BOl) HATHAWAY'. Faiths Banco and nephew of Cluny Cherry admits that Cluny attempted to force the marriage but protests ber innocence. Faith suspects Chris Wiley, thinking he knew that Cluny had willed much money to Cherry. Charles Keili.v Nest who drew up the will, testifies that Cluny made Cherry his chief benefleiarv whether or rot she married him. The coroner's jury releasee Cherry, but immediately she and her husband are arrested by DEVLIN deputy district attorney Faith is furious when Bob tells her ATTORNEY STEPHEN CHURCHILL, whom he employed thinks circumstances are against Cherry and suggests a plea of self-defense as the best chance of her freedom. Peculiar footprints and a bit of tom strap suggest that the murderer might be a eripplj. but this evidence is not ire-anted. Cherry is indicted for first degree murder. Bob plays burglar in Ralph Cluny s office and finds the threatening letter •written him. which Cherry had described. Tears spilled over Faith's flushed cheeks as she flung her clothes hel-ter-skelter into the smallest of the three suitcases she had brought so hopefully from home. Still unpacked was the heavy case, containing Cherry’s “going away” costume and other delicate treasures of her trousseau. She would never see that terrible Frankel again, with his “swell scheme.” She had a sudden insane impulse to tear his check to bits and disdainfully fling it into the wastebasket. But, even in her humlTation and blind anger, she realized a thousand dollars would be literally a life-sa\;er for the Lanes. “Starving kin!” Oh! Three times before she finished packing the telephone rang. She answered curly, resentfully, too angry to be courteous to the cajoling reporters who advanced lengthy arguments as to why she should consent to an interview. A timetable told her that a train which stopped at her home town was scheduled to leave Chicago at 12:45. She telephoned the night clerk to have her bill sent up, but refused his solicitous offer to make a Pullman reservation for her. Reporters at the train! If she could only escape them — She found two eager, insistent young men waiting in the hall at her door. She almost ran after the bellboy carrying her suitcases, but in the lobby of the hotel she threw up a protective arm just a moment too late to escape being photographed again. Her taxicab was trailed by two cars filled with reporters and photographers. But she managed to gain the sanctuary of the women's dressing-room of a Pullman car just before the train pulled out, almost too hysterically triumphant to have escaped without having to talk. The Pullman porter accepted her shakily writen telegram, promising to get it off at the next station, and she went to slee at last., immensely comforted by the thought that Bob Hathaway would be waiting for her when she arrived. But the porter must have gossiped a bit with travelers who boai'ded the train late that night, for as Faith scrubbed her wan cheeks and brushed her long, gleaming dark hair the next morning, the other women in the dressing-room eyed her curiously, furtively, as if were a freak —or a criminal. One

Children like Kem p*s BALSAM Ir t ifor Coughs/ |

Buy Y.OUR Wearing Apparel On the “AMERICAN”. BUDGET i PAYMENT PLAN r Ameant of kmmm t Pay Par W —fc Pay Par Month * 25.00 “$1.50 *so:od *Yoo ji2oo~: * 75 00 *4.50 *l*^)o "*looToo *6OO *25.66"VoiTnil7lip<ifirv>3iJ _ cliirttTccount or arrange to pay as you arc paid—whether weekly, semimonthly or monthly. No extra charge for t£k (enraMOM, tad each purchase is guaranteed to fs+s T s*liafartioar a*oory will be refunded. THE WHEN STORES 32 N. Pennsylvania

middle-aged, tight-lipped woman scrubbed the basin which Faith had used, Wiping it with hard, vicious swipes of a blue-striped towel, as if Faith had contaminated it. “That’s -Faith Lane—you know, the sister of that girl, Cherry, who murdered ” Faith, returning to the dressingroom for a forgotten toothbrush, shrank back between the folds of the heavy green curtains, her cheeks scarlet, blood pounding in her ears. O. she couldn't bear it, she told herself passionately, as she huddled in her seat, waiting for 9 o’clock and Bob. When Bob came foxward to meet her, she caught a glimpse of the morning paper he held in his hand: "CHERRY’S SISTER SELLS ” The sheet was folded on the rest of it, but she had no need to see the actual words in which her shame had been blazoned. “O, Bob!” she cried, involuntarily holding out her arms to him. NEXT: Boh reports progress. (Copyright, 1927, NEA Service, Inc.)

Recipes By Readers

NOTE—The Times will give $1 for each recipe submitted by a reader adjudged of sufficient merit to be printed in this column. One recipe is printed daily, except Fxiday, when twenty are given. Address Recipe Editor of The Times. Prizes will be mailed to winners. BLITZ KUCHEN One cup butter or substitute, one cup sugar, creamed thoi-oughly. Add four beaten eggs and beat until blended. Three-fourths cup milk, two cups flour in which three teaspoons of baking powder, one-fourth teaspoon of salt and one teaspoon of cinnamon have been sifted. Add

Too Hard There’s a much easier <way to reduce Strenuous exercise and starvation diet may reduce fat. But the ways are hard and long and never-ending. And they must be properly directed. There is an easy, pleasant way which millions have adopted. It acts to correct the cause of too much fat. That way is Marmola Prescription Tablets, used for 19 years. You sec the results in new vigor and slenderness wherever you look today. Marmola is based on many years of scientific research. It has proved itself to so many that people are now using a very large amount. One simply takes four tablets daily. No abnormal exercise or diet is required. Stop when results are completed. You should know this method. Watch how weight comes down, how vitality improves. Then tell others, as others will gladly tell you. Fat reduction need rot be hard. Prove this, for your own sake. Do it now. Marmola prescription tablets are sold by all druggists at $1 per box. If your druggist is out. he will get them at once from his jobber. MARMOLA tablet's * C Jhi7Heasant'lOayto%duct

Personal Gifts LYMAN'S 31 Monument Circle

Don’t Think of Buying DIirCCARPETS and IUJIIIJ LINOLEUMS Until you've inspected oar big stocks. DORFMAN RUG CO. 207 W. Wash, fit. LI. 5760

—By Martin

grated rind of one lemon, spread In a shallow pan one-fourth inch thick and sprinkle with three-fourths cup nuts, one-fourth cup sugar and a little cinnamon. Bak® In a hot oven. Mrs. C. H. Hull, 1522 S. Asbury St., city.

TOAST CUBES Toast cube', or crotons, are a good variation from the eternal crackers served with soup.

ONE SPOONFUL

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THE WOMAN’S DAY

Because women can’t see a great deal of fun In war, because they can’t quite giggle over a boxful of their son’s “remains,” and because the idea of gas and liquid lire rained upon mothers and children does not strike them as excrutiatingly funny, and, because, therefore, women’s clubs are working with tooth and nail for peace and disarmament and pacifism, they are lambasted by those malea who don't know what to do with their time if they don't go to war. These women are called “tools of communism and bolshevism.” They are labeled “traitors” and “slackers.” PEA-SHOOTERS And the male of the species regards their brains—or lack of them —pityingly. The male cannot understand the female mind at all. He talks with many words and says peace and disarmament cannot work. The woman, however, knows how simple, simple It is. While statesmen squabble like silly boys about who will be the first to lay down their gun, the woman knows that If two mothers of two bad boys “git up their dander” and forcibly take the pea-shooters and confiscate them there will be no more complaints from the neighbors about peas h. j the eyes. No nation wants war and ino nation would have it If there were some firm "Mas" to build a big bonfire and burn up all the sling-shots and pea-shooters. A BABY NOT SO MUCH! “I don't want a child. I want my own work. Most of this talk about the maternal impulse is the bunk. Some of us just don’t have It, and I think it’s just as well for society that some women should produce other things than babies.” So says a certain lady with a "career” which Is so relatively unimportant to everyone but herself that I cannot recall her name. Only the remark “stuck in my crop.” I think it brave and I think it true and 1 think, with her, that “women like this” are a good thing. You see, it goes like this. Most women have babies, and since it is only humanly natural to justify the thing one does and the thing one has, women have sort of banded to-

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By Allene Sumner

gether to extol child bearing as the one and only job and to look askance at the sisterhood which works hh well and as hard at something else, equally necessary. Having end rearing children Is an art, a worthwhile Job, a necessary job, a satisfying job, and all the rest. It deserves special praise as the only job which only women can do. But this world needs more, tolerance foi other women’s Jobs and pursuits. Me need more bouquets and more respect for the woman brave enough to admit that she Is devoid of the maternal instinct, but has an equally worth-while Job to do, as she has. THE COME-BACK “But what will become of the world if all women refuse to have babies?” is the eternal come-back of the afrald-to-thinker. One can only answer, “Rubbish! Nature looks out for that. For e,very woman born without the maternal instinct, 100 are born with It, and nature who provides the 100 provides the one other just as carefully, knowing she needs her, too.” “FOR MY BOY" “I did it for my boy," says Mrs. Myrtle Huddleston who, chewed and stabbed by baracuda, swam from Catalina Island to mainland. Which sums up the ambitious, aggressive woman of today very well. Mothers I who swam channels for their chili dren would have been much more of a rarity in the “mauve decades" and | even later when society casually assumed that fathers did the ambitious, aggressive stuff for their children, and if they didn’t, well, it wall too bad, but nothing could he done about it, and mother Just waited for better times. Even when there were no fathers, it was about the same thing. Women got along somehow. Baskets from the neighbors, “rospectable work with the needle,” but nothing that would “make people talk." A song and basket of fruit for these changing times! LIGHT OMELET An omelet left a moment too long In the oven will be flat and leathery. As soon as the mixture is baked firm, remove to a hot plat* and serve.

Standard Merchant dise Cut Price

FACE POWDERS Ayer’a Face Powder. Armand's Bouquet. Armand’s Cold Cream Towder. SI.OO Asurea Face Powder ~...6W 75c Boncilla Face Powder ......see 50e DJer-Klss Face Powder ....4to SI.OO DJer-Klss Face Powder ~*c 50c Freeman's Face Powder ....89c 50c Java Rice Face Powder ~..**e 60c Mavis Face Powder *9e 50c Pompeian Face Powder ....39c 50c Levy’e La Blache Face Pow.**c SI.OO Coty’e L’Orlgan Face Pow.Me SI.OO Mary Garden Face Powder.S4o Princess Pat Face Powder. 50c Nadine Face Powder *9e FACE CREAMS Ayer's Creams. 65c Berry’s Freckle Cream 49c $1.25 Berry's Kremola 98 75c Boncilla Vanishing Cream ~690 75c Boncilla Cold Cream ........Me SI.OO Boncilla Beautlfler 74e 50c Dag. & Ram. Cold Cream ..ate 60c Elcayn Cream 4c 60c Malvina Cream 49c 50c Milkweed Cream ~**e SI.OO Milkweed Cream .?♦ COc Pompeian Day Cream 45c Otic Pompeian Night Cream 45c #I.OO Pompeian Night Cream ~..74c 75c Satin Skin Cold Cream ....69c 75c Satin Skin Van. Cream 6*o 60c. Sea Shell Cream ~49c 25c' Woodbury’s Facial Cream ..190 60c Woodbury’s Facial Cream ..3*e s<ic Lemon Cream *• 50c Theatrical Cream *9o FOR THE HAIR $2.50 Bare to Hair *l-W 50c Cicero • Mo SI.OO Waukee *4 *I.OO Danderlne 74* 50c Danderlne ..490 33c Danderlne 290 $1.23 Canute Water 98 $1.50 Brownatone .*l.l* 50c Brownatone ** *1.50 Lotus Me *I.OO Lucky Tiger 74e *I.OO Wild Root Hair Tonic ....• 60c Wild Root Hair Tonic ....49e 85c Wild Root Hair Tonic ....Me (1.50 Kolorbuk *l.l* 50c Lucky Tiger Mo $1.60 Plnaud's Hair Tonic .....*1.19 75c Plnaud's Hair Tonle ~ *o 25c Golden Glint ••••..19s 23c Golden Glint Shampoo l*o 50c Parker Hair Tonic Mo SI.OO Parker Hair Tonic 74 SI.OO Liquid Arvon .......*4e SI.OO B. Paul Henna (all colors) ...74 13c Amiisl. 2 for *6 $1.50 WestpbaU .98* 60c WestpbaU 4*a

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